"ZSRx" Archive

'ZSRx Tweets:' A three week mini-MOOC

twitter-logoContinuing in its ZSRx series of open, online courses for the Wake Forest community, the ZSR Library is excited to announce its newest course, “ZSRx Tweets,” a three-week guided exploration of Twitter, the popular social networking service.

In this free course, Wake Forest Fellow Laura Chin will help you to get started with Twitter and teach you to curate a useful stream of content. Together, participants will explore privacy issues, Twitter conventions, etiquette and ways to use Twitter to enhance your personal or professional brand. Look for some fun cameos from prominent campus figures, and follow along with the course hashtag: #zsrxtweets.

Like most ZSRx courses, ZSRx Tweets is open to anyone and everyone, beginners and experts alike. The course will run from May 27 to June 16. Sign up here.

Read more

ZSRx mini-MOOC a success

wall-of-ebooksOver 400 librarians, scholars, publishers, researchers, writers, readers, parents, alumi and friends recently attended a three-week online seminar called, “The Past, Present, and Future Perfect Tense of E-Books,” hosted by the Z. Smith Reynolds Library via their ZSRx platform. The course was intended to serve as a gentle introduction to the topic of e-books. Read more in the Library Gazette.

Categories: Events

ZSR librarian recognized for creating online course

Kyle DenlingerAn interview with e-learning librarian Kyle Denlinger was recently featured on the website of EDUCAUSE, a nonprofit association devoted to advancing higher education.

Denlinger discussed features of a new online course offered by the Z. Smith Reynolds Library called ZSRx that he created to help Wake Forest parents and alumni learn how to use the Web more effectively. Open to anyone who wanted to enroll, more than 700 people registered for this free, four-week course, ranging from recent graduates to an alumna from the class of 1954. About 50 participants were active in the course during any given week.

ZSRx was made using free online tools. The course, which took several months to complete, covers Internet search strategies, online privacy issues, and how to evaluate information accuracy. Parents and alumni who have taken the course gain a better understanding of the expertise of librarians. On the final course survey, they described the course as “a wonderful learning experience” that has made “internet searching more manageable.”

More courses are in the works, and ZSR is leading the charge. “Libraries have always been hubs of their physical communities. We also need to be hubs of digital communities,” Denlinger said. “Offering courses like ZSRx — lightweight, informal, communities wrapped around a collection of content — is a huge opportunity for libraries of all kinds.”

If you’re interested in completing ZSRx, course content is here.

Categories: Faculty News

Archives